There are bone spurs on the back of the bone being studied.
Osteophytes are bone spurs, a sign of arthritis. Basically, it says you have arthritis in your neck, with bone spurs protruding toward the back of the spine at levels C3 through C5. Whether this has any causative effect on any symptoms you may or may not be experiencing is impossible to determine from your question.
Basically this medical term is bone spur formation. Disc osteophyte is a spinal cord condition that is caused by the development of bone spurs or osteophytes on the vertebrae or intervertebral discs.
posterior disc osteophyte at c5 c6 mild indentation on anterior thecal sac. there is uncinate spurring with left formaminal narrowing c5 c6 . would this require surgery?
osteophyte
Posterior disc osteophyte is a condition where more than one spinal vertebrae or disc is affected by bone spurs. This can happen during aging, from a degenerative disease, obesity, or from your body producing extra nodules of bone.
bone spurs
marginal osteophytes are a result and a part of arthritis. they are the build up of bone around the area in joints where the bone has started to touch bone in joints.
Osteophytis (plural Osteophytes)
posterior posterior
The nasopharynx is posterior to the nose.
Posterior
I believe that is the Femoral artery.